The Ashmolean Museum is currently home to a remarkable collection of Hellenic treasures.

More than 500 objects recovered from the ancient city of Aegae have gone on display - the first time the vast majority of them have been seen anywhere in the world.

They represent a fascinating journey tracing the chronological development of Aegae's long and illustrious history from the pre-Temenid era (1100-650 BC) to the age of Philip II and Alexander the Great (around 350-300 BC).

One of the burials in the "queens" cluster at Aegae, dating to around 480 BC, yielded 26 lifesized clay heads. Astonishing both in terms of their early date and their realistic and expressive facial features, these enigmatic faces would originally have been part of wooden statues (xoana).

These gold Medusa heads, found in the tomb of Philip II, would originally have adorned a linen cuirass of the king. As a popular evil-averting device, it was thought that whoever looked at the eyes of Medusa would turn to stone. These examples are of a particularly high quality.

Gold shield decoration. Gold foil, from the royal cemetery (5th century BC)

This gold strip shows a scene of combat between two warriors, both nude and equipped with helmets, shields and spears. It comes from the decoration of a shield and was found in the tomb of a member of the royal family.

This fine silver jug or oinochoe is one of two found among the banquet vessels in the tomb of Philip II (336 BC). It is a small masterpiece made by an artist of the time. Decorated on the rim and handle it is further embellished with the head of a satyr – a male follower of the company of Dionysus.

This marble head of a youth, or perhaps a hero, was discovered in the Sanctuary of Eukleia, the goddess of fair repute. The sanctuary, located in the agora of the city of Aegae, has yielded evidence for the presence of the royal family in the form of sculptural dedications by Queen Eurydice, mother of three kings and grandmother of Alexander the Great.